Camden Home for Friendless Children - 1915CLICK ON PHOTO FOR ENLARGED VIEW

The
Camden Home for Friendless Children was established in 1865. By the
1890s the institution had located at 915 Haddon Avenue
in Camden NJ.

Mrs.
Lucretia Read, the widow of
Camden realtor William T. Read Sr., and mother of New Jersey State
Senator William T. Read Jr., was very active in the affairs of the Home.
She served on the Board of Managers, and eventually was elected
President of that body. She was President Emeritus of the Board of
Managers when she died in October 1936 at the age of 83.

Shortly after World War II, in 1946, the name of the building was changed to the
Camden Home for Children.
The home, with its capacity of 56 children, eventually closed, due to
age and growing needs. After being renamed the Camden Home for
Children, the foundation operated in the 1960s and 1970s at Kaighn
Avenue and Vesper Boulevard, a facility now used by the Camden Board of
Education.

When
the Camden Home for Friendless Children at 915 Haddon Avenue closed
sometime in the 1960s, the
building was razed, and the Camden branch of the Salvation
Army built a
new building which they presently occupy, at the Haddon Avenue
address. The old building is gone, but 915 Haddon avenue is
still an address that takes care of Camden's underprivileged children,
as the Salvation Army has remained there.

For a
number of years, the Camden Home for Children organization maintained
offices in Westmont, New Jersey. Although as of 2011 there is no longer
any office or facility, the organization continues to serve children in
need in a behind the scenes capacity, supporting sister agencies in
their missions.

The Camden Home for Friendless Children was renamed Camden Home for Children &
S.P.C.C. after merger with the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children.
Longtime Executive Director John Powell passed away on August 20, 2010.
He was succeeded in this position by Alan L. Stedman.

The Camden Home for Children Board accepts donations and bequests to augment its work which is to support various Southern New Jersey agencies working with youth, especially those in residential group settings, with grants for targeted capital projects that are otherwise unfunded by other private or government sources.

Information on past residents of the Camden Home for Children is confidential and subject to new privacy laws adopted by the State of New Jersey and will only be further accessed after adoption by the Camden Home Board of Trustees of a new Privacy Policy, scheduled for September 2011. A fee will likely apply, and an application and documentation of relationship will be required.

The
Camden Home for Children and S.P.C.C. may be reached by postal mail and
e-mail at the addresses below:

The Camden Home For Children &
S.P.C.C.
P.O. Box 1025
Haddonfield, NJ 08033

A Brief History of The Camden Home for Children & SPCC“In Service to Youth”

A Need to House Orphans and Needy Children

At a meeting in the First Presbyterian Church on 5th Street in Camden in the Autumn of 1864, Mr. and Mrs. Earl J. Atkinson inspired other dedicated, community- spirited citizens to venture into a project with them. The purpose was to establish an Orphan’s Home to care for children whose fathers failed to return from the Civil War. By February of 1865, the enterprise was established, and a house at 522 Federal Street was rented for these purposes in March. The first child was admitted on the 8th of May, 1865, to what was known as the Camden Home for Friendless Children. Now, almost 150 years later, The Camden Home for Children continues its dedication in giving back to the community by supporting those working with needy youth in South Jersey.

Soon the organization was able to rent an adjacent house, and then both were renovated and filled with children in need. On December 9th of 1873, the Camden Home for Children made the transition to a four-story facility at 915
Haddon Avenue where it remained until 1960, serving from 45 to 100 children at a time, never once asking for financial support from the public, but benefiting from a number of generous donors. The organization proved itself, as it kept its doors open through harsh times such as war and depression. Around 1946, the name was changed to The Camden Home for Children.
The Camden Home was caring for about 157 children in 1957, including those placed in foster homes. But had to turn away numbers of others. At one point the Camden Home served only children 12 and under. Later, children of school age were housed but younger children were placed in foster homes. By 1958 the Camden Home had a staff of 39 and an Executive Director as the administrator. The Board governing the Camden Home had 15 members. By 1958 it was stated that: All children who by circumstances are without a home are served by the Home. There is no distinction as to race, creed, or color. The only question is: ‘Does this child need care?’

The need had continued to grow so much that the Board acquired 8.5 acres of land at
Kaighn's & Vesper Avenues, hired architects to plan three two-story buildings in a campus setting, and launched a fundraising campaign in 1957/58 to raise about $486,000 needed after sale of the Haddon Ave property to complete the new facility. Cecil Bentley was the President of the Building Fund Committee, and Bryant W. Langston was General Chairman of the fundraising drive.

The institution had one goal, and that was to provide the proper shelter and care for children who were abandoned, neglected, misguided, and lacked the proper medical needs and educational background. The idea has always been to prepare many of these adolescents for adulthood
(T. Bergbauer, Courier-Post, 9/14/08). The funds were raised and the campus built, with the advice of experts in Child Welfare, so that each of the 6 floors would house only 12 children in a “cottage plan”, and the children would have the feeling of being in a home.

Changing Priorities with the Times

Known as an organization that has had its doors open to the community since 1865, The Camden Home for Children is truly an historic institution that has drawn in many dedicated citizens over the years. Making room for children and maintaining safe conditions was the organization’s main priority. Photographs of this era show children at church and Sunday school and in moments of grace before meals. The pictures shed light on the spirit of the organization, as it opened its doors to all children, regardless of background. The Camden Home for Children is a community institution, operates as non-profit, and has never been owned or operated by the city or county.

As time went on, The Camden Home for Children continued to help those in need of a better life. Some came and left more quickly than others, but the organization had the same goal for all who walked through its doors. After moving from
Haddon Avenue
to Kaighn Avenue across from Farnham Park in November, 1960, the new $750,000 facility gave way to what was expected to be a better haven for children with less overcrowding and the ability to properly handle as many as 75 children at a time. At that point it was estimated the Home had served about 15,000 children. At the time of the closing of the facility in 1979, there were reported to be 31 state-referred, emotionally disturbed, inner city boys between the ages of 9 and 16 housed there.

The next nineteen years allowed The Camden Home for Children to provide the necessary shelter for those in crisis, to accept referrals and subsidies from government funding, and complete a merger with the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children that created a new title – The Camden Home for Children & SPCC.

Finding Yet Another Role

In 1979, after 114 years of this tradition and largely because of state underfunding for those placed in the residential facility, the Board felt compelled to vote to close the facility. Without increased state funding, The Camden Home and many other residential facilities in New Jersey, were running large deficits and could not maintain the financial needs to stay open. The Courier Post Editorial dubbed the Home “one of the city’s outstanding institutions over a long period of years”
(T. Bergbauer, Courier Post, 9/14/08). And it was said to be “one of the most efficiently operated institutions of its kind in the nation and a model of friendliness, warmth, humane treatment, cleanliness and cheerfulness.”

Senator Cowgill, a member of the Board, led a group wishing to close the Home permanently and give its money to the courts. Dr. John (Jack) Breakstone was the Executive Director at that time, and David A. Stedman was President of the Board. They had other ideas. With the support of a majority of Board members who remembered the care the Home had once provided for Civil War orphans at one time and how it had shifted its role over the century to providing residential care for troubled boys, they believed the Home had a useful place in service to youth, even if its direct residential care of troubled youth would cease. And, although the facility itself closed on November 28, 1979, and the State of New Jersey was forced to find new placements for the many emotionally disturbed inner-city boys who were served by the Home, the Board decided to control its funds and continue in a different direction. The facility was sold to the Camden Board of Education for one dollar for use of the school administration, and in 1980 The Camden Home for Children and SPCC became incorporated as a nonprofit foundation.

Led by Dr. Breakstone, the Board assumed the task of helping to bring together other New Jersey youth agencies into a consensus bloc to lobby the State for more reasonable regulations and higher subsidies for its referrals. After this was successful, through existing endowments and return on investments over the years, the Camden Home began to award grant money to agencies and institutions that continue to provide services for children who are in crisis, primarily in the Camden, Gloucester and Burlington County area, but more recently extending to all of South Jersey. In recent years, under the guidance of Executive Director John Powell, the scope of assistance was expanded to assist the “aging out” population, those from 19 through 22. These young adults would otherwise have been denied full support in the transition to independence. Continually reexamining its role in service to youth, The Camden Home has and will continue to remain dedicated to all youth in need.

************************************************

Works Cited

Bergbauer, Thomas (2008, September 14). Camden Home for Children was a haven for 114 years. Courier Post, p. 3C.

Source
Information: THE HISTORY OF CAMDEN COUNTY, NEW JERSEY
by George. R. Prowell, Member Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
PHILADELPHIA: L.J. RICHARDS & CO. 1886

THE
CAMDEN HOME FOR FRIENDLESS CHILDREN is an institution located on
Haddon Avenue, above Mount Vernon, the object and design of which is to
afford a home, food, clothing and schooling for destitute friendless
children, and, at a suitable age, to place them with respectable
families to learn some useful trade or occupation. The home was
established and is conducted by a corporation. The charter, granted by
the State Legislature, April 6, 1865, sets forth that "Whereas, a
number of citizens of this State have formed an association for the
laudable and benevolent purpose of educating and providing for
friendless and destitute children; and whereas, the Legislature of this
State is willing to encourage such purposes; therefore, Be it enacted by
the Senate and General Assembly of the State of New Jersey, that Matthew
Newkirk, Elijah G. Cattell, James H. Stevens, George W.N. Custis, J.
Earl Atkinson, Joseph C. De La Cour, Joseph D. Reinboth, Robert B.
Potts, Jesse W. Starr, Edmund E. Read, John B. Graham, Benjamin H.
Browning, Solomon M. Stimson, Philander C. Brinck, John Aikman, Thomas
P. Carpenter, Elisha V. Glover, Thomas B.
Atkinson, Isaac L. Lowe, Peter
L. Voorhees, and their associates, be and they are hereby incorporated
and made a body politic in law and fact, by the name, style and title of
'The Camden Home for Friendless Children.'"

Source
Information: THE HISTORY OF CAMDEN COUNTY, NEW JERSEY
by George. R. Prowell, Member Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
PHILADELPHIA: L.J. RICHARDS & CO. 1886

Youngsters at the Camden Home for Friendless
Children yesterday attended "en masse" the opening of
the wading pool at the home's playground. More than 50 of the
"swimmers" are shown above as they, romped in the
cooling waters.

Children
at Camden Home Have
Big Time in Wading PoolBathing Place,
Given by Citizens Officially Opened­
Four Youthful Charges, Left Motherless, to Return to Father

Bathing
in the backyard is a privilege of the children of the Camden
Home for Friendless Children that is enjoyed by few of the
other youngsters in the city. Yesterday, 63 of the little
charges of the institution romped and played in the newly opened
wading pool in the home playground.

Built
by contributions of residents of the city, the pool was
officially opened yesterday for the first time this season to
the delight of the chil­dren whose gay laughter and shouts
resounded throughout the grounds.

The
children, whose ages range from 4, to 12, finished their school
term last Friday and are now on "vacation" during
which time they are taken for sight-seeing trips and picnics by
civic club groups and individuals.

Included
among the recent outings given the children was a trip to the
Philadelphia Zoological Gardens under auspices of the Camden
Kiwanis Club. Plans are now complete for a picnic at Berlin Park
under direction of Rev. George Yard and members of the First
Methodist Episcopal Church.

Six
of the children, some of whom have been at the home for more
than six years, will leave the institution within the next few
days. Four of those are returning to their father who was left
with the motherless group upon the death of his wife:

Not
all of the home inmates were among the "waders" at the
pool yesterday. Five charges are but in fants who are occupants
of the "baby house," and were unable to join the
crowd.

The
children who are under direction of Miss E. R. Schofield,
superintendent of the home, apparently enjoy the period of
vacation equally as much as youngsters whose parents take them
to seashore or mountains, with the older children of the group
acting as embryonic "dads" and mothers to the smaller
inmates.

Caroline
Suzanne "Carol" Sampson was born in 1921 in Philadelphia to
William Allen Sampson (1860-1937) and the former Helen Ida Petty
(1887-1931). Her mother was a native of Newfoundland who came to
Massachusetts in the mid-1910s, her father was a Bostonian. The family,
which included older siblings Lillian and Herbert, and younger brother
John moved to Camden in around 1924. Younger brother William was born the
following year, and baby sister Marion came in 1927.

Sadly,
Helen Sampson took ill and died at the County Hospital at Lakeland,
Gloucester Township and Mr. Sampson, who was much older, suffered a stroke
around the same time, was unable to care for the children, and died in
1937. Older brother Herbert was sent to the County Farm at Lakeland, older
sister Lillian may have been sent to a county facility as well. Carol,
John and William were sent to the Camden Home for Friendless Children,
Marion was placed elsewhere. Carol, John and William stayed at the Home
for Friendless Children until they were deemed too old and transferred to
the County Detention Home in Pennsauken. It is unclear as to whether they
were sent together or a each of them aged out over limit set for the Home
for Friendless Children.

The
following are excerpts from an oral interview conducted by Carol's niece,
Anne Sampson Harrison, prior to her death in 1998.

Q-
Do you remember any of the friends you had at that time?

A-
The only ones I really remember was when I was older and I was in the
Children's home. I can remember one funny story, when I was in the first
children's home. It was right before my mother died or right after. They
put us all in the Camden Home for Children on Haddon Avenue.

Q-
The
Home for the Friendless?

A-
Yeah, the Home for the Friendless
Children, and I was 9 and I had 3 kids
to take care of
besides myself. I had to make sure they had their baths and were ready
to go to church on Sunday's. They used to be inspected by the matron, to
make sure they were all right and that you were doing your job alright.
We'd walk to church and another girl, I can't remember her name, but the
living room on the first floor and we were on the 4th floor, the girls,
and the boys were on the 3rd .

We
were down in the sewing room. Like every day, you didn't have your own
clothes, you just wore anything that fit you, you know, everything would
be washed that night and then the next morning you were issued clothes
that fit you and that's what you wore. Like what you had on today, I
might have worn yesterday. We were down there and we were putting them
(the clothes) on the dumbwaiter. You had to pull it up till it was on
the 4th floor and then I'm up there on the 4th floor taking them off and
putting them away. And we got to fooling around, messing around and
we're hollering things up and down the dumbwaiter , stick your head in,
here comes a woodpecker and it wasn't her that was down there it was the
sewing lady, Mrs. Fisher. And she was a lady and she had gray hair and
it was up on a great big knot on top and she said," Who is that up
there? You come down here." And I said to her," I'm sorry, we
were fooling around." And she said," You're not supposed to be
fooling around, you're supposed to be working. She made me write 500
times, I must not say to Mrs. Fisher, Stick your head in here comes a
woodpecker. 500 times, I had to go to her room, every afternoon around 4
o'clock and I had to sit there and write so many till I had 500
done.

You
know, these were the things and eh...when, the dining room, when you
went in there, you had to sing, and everybody marches 2 by 2 and you
sing a song going in and then you'd say grace and then everybody sits
down. They served Squash and it was mashed and it had no taste, they had
no salt and pepper on the tables and you handed them you plate and they
went ahead and filled it up and I said," What is that?" And
they said," It's squash, it'll make you grow." Well I couldn't
eat that, but you weren't allowed to throw anything away , but like
chicken bones or anything that was un-edible, like bones of any kind.
Everything else was edible. But I couldn't eat this squash, so when I
went up to take my plate back up, you scrape what was left in a big pan
and then they put your plate on the table. So, I scraped it in but she
caught me. Well she said, "Young lady, come with me." And she
grabbed me by the ear and she took me into the kitchen. And I said,
" I'm sorry, but I couldn't eat that, it was making me sick. And
she said, "Well, your going to eat some," she said,
"That's good for you though, it's good for your bones and will make
you grow." and she's going on with all this baloney. So she sat me
down with a soup bowl full of it and handed me a spoon and said start
eating. Well, I just looked at the dish and upchucked all over. And she
said," You can go. So she let me go, I was surprised she didn't
make me clean it up. The next time we had squash, she made sure she
didn't put none on my plate.

Q-
How
old were you then?

A-
I
was about 9.

Q-
How
long were you there?

A-
I
guess I was there for about a year or so. Another thing they had there,
did Herb tell you they had a great big tank on the side of the building?
It looked like an oil tank only it was smaller round, you know. It went
from the 4th floor down to the first floor and it was a fire escape, and
it had a, like a sliding board, there were no steps, it was a sliding
board, so every Saturday they let you practice, because if there was
ever a fire they didn't want the little kids to be afraid. We'd go in
the kitchen and get some, they'd say bird paper, with the wax and you'd
sit down on that...well the older girls had to take a little girl cause
it was all dark in there, there were no lights or anything, just at the
bottom the door was open when you swept out. Every Saturday we got to
play in this thing for about 4 hours. You go to the top and go down and
go all the way upstairs again and go again until you got tired, you
know, from climbing the steps. The older girls had to take a little girl
with them so they wouldn't be afraid and you'd tell them it's dark in
there but you'll be alright. Then they got used to it, in case there was
ever a fire. But years later, I went to a ...where they read your
handwriting?

Q
-
A Palmist?

A
-
Not your palm, a hand writing expert and the first one, with just my
signature, he told me my whole life and I never saw him before. He told
me, you lived in a...looks like an institution. He said, what's that big
oil tank doing on the side? This great big black oil tank. And I said,
"That's not an oil tank, it looks like and oil tank, but it's not.
" You know it reminded you of a silo. I said, "It was actually
used as a fire escape," I said, "It had a slide all the way
down from the fourth floor to the first and I explained it all to him.
And he told me my whole life.

Q-
You said you lived on Fogarty,
do you remember what the house looked like?

A-
It was a row house, a skinny little house. You know, when anybody came
to stay at
the house, I had to sleep on the couch or the floor, and I thought that
was great. I was only little so it was like camping out. I guess Herb
told you that after they took my father to Lakeland, well by that time,
they took him and he went on the farm, my brothers Bill and John and I
were all taken to a detention home. They couldn't take us back to the
Camden Home for Children because we were too old. That only went up to
maybe 10 Years old. So we had to go to the detention home where they
took the bad kids, you know, the kids that got into trouble.

Camden
Courier-Post - June 2, 1933

PYNE
POYNT PLANS ALL-DAY 4TH PARTYProgram
to Have 'Something'
on Continuously, Day and Night

Plans
for the thirty-third anniversary of the Pyne Poynt Athletic Association to
be observed with an all ­day program at Pyne Poynt
Park
July 4 were discussed last night at a meeting in the Pyne Poynt Social
Club, 929 North
Fifth Street.

Among
the features tentatively planned are a children's parade at 9.30 a. m.,
under the supervision of Isaac Kyler; memorial service at 11
a.
m., under direction of William B.
Sullender;
sporting events for men, women and children to start at 1.30
p.
m., under direction of Alfred J. Ross, Jr.; outdoor motion pictures
starting at 9 p. m., under supervision of Robert J. Nelson and a dance in
charge of Samuel G. Dickinson, Jr., starting 11t 10.30
p.
m.